Catherine F. Smura
University of Oxford
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Featured researches published by Catherine F. Smura.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2008
Simon J. Clarke; Paul Adamson; Sebastian J. C. Herkelrath; Oliver J. Rutt; Dinah R. Parker; Michael J. Pitcher; Catherine F. Smura
A series of layered oxychalcogenide and oxypnictide solids is described that contain oxide layers separated by distinct layers, which contain the softer chalcogenide (S, Se, Te) or pnictide (P, As, Sb, Bi) anions. The relationships between the crystal structures adopted by these compounds are described, and the physical and chemical properties of these materials are related to the structures and the properties of the elements. The properties exhibited by the oxychalcogenide materials include semiconductor properties, for example, in LaOCuCh (Ch = chalcogenide) and derivatives, unusual magnetic properties exhibited by the class Sr 2MO 2Cu 2-deltaS 2 (M = Mn, Co, Ni), and redox properties exhibited by the materials Sr 2MnO 2Cu 2 m-0.5 S m+1 ( m = 1-3) and Sr 4Mn 3O 7.5Cu 2Ch 2 (Ch = S, Se). Recent results in the oxychalcogenide area are reviewed, and some new results on the intriguing series of compounds Sr 2MO 2Cu 2-deltaS 2 (M = Mn, Co, Ni) are reported. Oxypnictides have received less recent attention, but this is changing: a new frenzy of research is underway following the discovery of high-temperature superconductivity (>40 K) in derivatives of the layered oxyarsenide LaOFeAs. The early results in this exciting new area will be reviewed.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Catherine F. Smura; Dinah R. Parker; Mohamed Zbiri; Mark R. Johnson; Zoltan A. Gal; Simon J. Clarke
The antiferromagnetic structures of the layered oxychalcogenides (Sr(1-x)Ba(x))(2)CoO(2)Cu(2)S(2) (0 ≤ x ≤ 1) have been determined by powder neutron diffraction. In these compounds Co(2+) is coordinated by four oxide ions in a square plane and two sulfide ions at the apexes of an extremely tetragonally elongated octahedron; the polyhedra share oxide vertexes. The magnetic reflections present in the diffraction patterns can in all cases be indexed using a √2a × √2a × c expansion of the nuclear cell, and nearest-neighbor Co(2+) moments couple antiferromagnetically within the CoO(2) planes. The ordered magnetic moment of Co(2+) in Sr(2)CoO(2)Cu(2)S(2) (x = 0) is 3.8(1) μ(B) at 5 K, consistent with high-spin Co(2+) ions carrying three unpaired electrons and with an additional significant unquenched orbital component. Exposure of this compound to moist air is shown to result in copper deficiency and a decrease in the size of the ordered moment to about 2.5 μ(B); there is a strong correlation between the size of the long-range ordered moment and the occupancy of the Cu site. Both the tetragonal elongation of the CoO(4)S(2) polyhedron and the ordered moment in (Sr(1-x)Ba(x))(2)CoO(2)Cu(2)S(2) increase with increasing Ba content, and in Ba(2)CoO(2)Cu(2)S(2), which has Co(2+) in an environment that is close to purely square planar, the ordered moment of 4.5(1) μ(B) at 5 K is over 0.7 μ(B) larger than that in Sr(2)CoO(2)Cu(2)S(2), so the unquenched orbital component in this case is even larger than that observed in octahedral Co(2+) systems such as CoO. The experimental observations of antiferromagnetic ground states and the changes in properties resulting from replacement of Sr by Ba are supported by ab initio calculations on Sr(2)CoO(2)Cu(2)S(2) and Ba(2)CoO(2)Cu(2)S(2). The large orbital moments in these systems apparently result from spin-orbit mixing of the unequally populated d(xz), d(yz), and d(z(2)) orbitals, which are reckoned to be almost degenerate when the CoO(4)S(2) polyhedron reaches its maximum elongation. The magnitudes of the ordered moments in high-spin Co(2+) oxide, oxychalcogenide, and oxyhalide systems are shown to correlate well with the tetragonal elongation of the coordination environment. The large orbital moments lead to an apparently magnetostrictive distortion of the crystal structures below the Neél temperature, with the symmetry lowered from tetragonal I4/mmm to orthorhombic Immm and the size of the distortion correlating well with the size of the long-range ordered moment for all compositions and for temperature-dependent data gathered on Ba(2)CoO(2)Cu(2)S(2).
Inorganic Chemistry | 2009
Michael J. Pitcher; Catherine F. Smura; Simon J. Clarke
The reported anomalously small cell volume and magnetic moment of the layered oxysulfide CeCuOS are apparently the results of copper deficiency arising from exposure to ambient moist air; the stoichiometric compound does exist and is a well-behaved Ce(III) compound.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2007
Timothy Sambrook; Catherine F. Smura; Simon J. Clarke; Kang Min Ok; P. Shiv Halasyamani
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2006
Zoltan A. Gal; Oliver J. Rutt; Catherine F. Smura; Timothy P. Overton; Nicolas Barrier; Simon J. Clarke; Joke Hadermann
Inorganic Chemistry | 2005
Sarah Broadley; Zoltan A. Gal; Furio Cora; Catherine F. Smura; Simon J. Clarke
Chemistry of Materials | 2012
Paul Adamson; Joke Hadermann; Catherine F. Smura; Oliver J. Rutt; Geoffrey Hyett; David G. Free; Simon J. Clarke
Chemistry of Materials | 2008
Geoffrey Hyett; Zoltan A. Gal; Catherine F. Smura; Simon J. Clarke
Archive | 2012
Paul Adamson; Joke Hadermann; Catherine F. Smura; Oliver J. Rutt; Geoffrey Hyett; David G. Free; Simon J. Clarke
Meeting Abstracts | 2008
Dongli Zeng; Jordi Cabana Jiménez; Sylvio Indris; Oliver J. Rutt; Catherine F. Smura; Paul Adamson; Simon J. Clarke; Clare P. Grey